Ontario budget promises help for northern families

Finance Minister Dwight Duncan released the Ontario budget March 25. Photo from ministry website.

Finance Minister Dwight Duncan released the Ontario budget March 25. Photo from ministry website.

Mar 25, 2010- 5:34 PM

By: Stacey Lavallie - Sudbury Northern Life Staff

UPDATED — March 31, 11:58 a.m.

The 2010 Ontario budget was revealed as a budget with the intent to help re-skill workers, provide jobs, help the north and bring the province out of the red, but not everyone is pleased with the document.

The budget speech was delivered by provincial finance minister Dwight Duncan in Queen's Park on March 25 at 4 p.m.
He paid special attention to the education, health and job situations across Ontario, as well as a focus on the situation in northern Ontario, which is suffering a worse recession due to the downturn in the forestry and minerals industries.

Duncan announced $32 billion for job creation programs, in order to continue to stimulate short-term job creation as well as re-training people who have lost their jobs in fields in which they are now unable to find work.

The biggest help for the north in the budget was the three-year Northern Industrial Electricity Rate Program, which would cut eligible industrial hydro costs by about 25 per cent per industry. This would help northern industries compete with the neighbouring provinces of Manitoba and Quebec, both with lower hydro rates.

A new and permanent Northern Ontario Energy Credit of up to $200 per year would be made available to help eligible families.

The budget also freezes compensation packages for MPPs and non-unionized provincial employees. The province is honouring wage increases written into collective agreements, however. Compensation means that not only are wages frozen, but insurance benefits will not be changing and pension plans remain the same.

For Nickel Belt MPP France Gélinas, the offerings in the budget are "just more of the same" from a provincial government "stuck in neutral."

"Northern Ontario's lost tens of thousands of jobs since the McGuinty Liberals were elected in 2003," Gélinas said. "Entire communities have been decimated. Families wonder how (they will) put food on the table and pay bills each month."
Gélinas said the parts of the budget meant to assist the north were mostly an insult.

"Now that 45,000 forestry jobs have been lost, the government finally delivers an industrial hydro rate...where was this kind of initiative in 2004 or 2006 or 2008 when jobs could have been saved?"

"The Northern Ontario Energy Credit is like a cruel joke," she claimed. She said with the new HST, it will cost northern Ontario families about $260 per year to heat their homes, more than the maximum granted by the credit — if people are qualify for the maximum allowed by the program.

The funding for education, which would create as many as 20,000 places for students at colleges and universities, is mostly for southern Ontario institutions, Gélinas said. With northern universities and colleges approaching maximum capacity, funding for more students is pointless as there would be no where to put them. Instead, the funding for college and university spaces caters to southern Ontario institutions, which have the room.

Not everyone was unhappy with the budget, though.

Greater Sudbury mayor John Rodriguez noted that in addition to the hydro credit plans for families and businesses, the budget calls for a $10 million increase in the Northern Ontario Heritage fund, bringing the total of the fund to $90 million.

The budget also allows for the government to help Huron Central Railway with its proposal to upgrade and develop infrastructure on the railway between Sault Ste. Marie and Greater Sudbury. Up to $15 million of the railway's $33 million plan would be supported. The upgrades to the railway would make it possible for more industrial and passenger use.

Rodriguez was also pleased the budget stepped in where “the federal government dropped the ball," by promising additional funds for child care, something he said he believes is important to "the working families of Greater Sudbury."

Both Rodriguez and Bartolucci said they believed the budget's focus on northern Ontario would help stimulate jobs as well as keep people working in the north, instead of moving to southern Ontario or Alberta, where there are more jobs.

Bartolucci called the 2010 budget is the “friendliest northern Ontario budget to date.”

With $1.2 billion promised for infrastructure upgrades to water, wastewater, roads, and more, the budget is there to help build northern Ontario, he said.

“The budget acknowledges the impact of the global recession on Sudbury," he noted. "We continue to stay the course so that we can achieve our goals as defined by the people of northern Ontario."

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9 Comments

  • ....we should have our own governing body with Sudbury being the capital"
    Better still North(ern) Ontario should separate but to avoid almost immediate bankruptcy leave Sudbury with the south.

  • I completely agree with you there. The southern ontario lifestyle is quite different than the northern ontario lifestyle in terms of our outdoor recreation and economy. I'm not mentioning anything new there, but ya, you're right, we should have our own governing body with Sudbury being the capital.

  • This shouldn't surprise anyone. The liberals are just like the PC's - neo-liberal capitalists. They take care of big business by screwing over the working class, so corporations get a better bottom line. That is the point of the liberals and PC's. Part of the way they seem to do this is sink the country and province into huge debt, all the while corporations are making record breaking profits, now directly off of tax payers money. Look at all those banks that got handouts from the government, and then go and show massive profits that year, with record breaking CEO bonuses etc being handed out.

    HST, E-health scams, government handout rip-offs, no anti-scab laws in place, hundreds of broken promises.... and the list goes on... how bad do things have to get before people start to realise that voting for the same old parties never get us anything new.

    Also, I think Northern Ontario would be better off splitting and becoming independent from Toronto, and the right wing - neo-liberal loving south.

  • HST..... I can't believe this is actually going to happen. More tax legislation being rammed down everyone's throat literally unchallenged. The petitions are useless.

  • Reality check? The deficit is roughly equal to the amount of money that the liberals wasted during their many scandals...HST, school closures, healthcare cuts...thats how we're all paying for it now.

  • Hey, don't cut down that $200 so fast - that's two months' worth of my electricity bill, and I'd be damn glad to use that to pay students loans down!! :)

    I see this "province of Sudbury/northern ontario" topic gets brought up every so often... look, I wish we had more say, too, but seriously? Probably every province in Canada would want to split in two over this issue.

    Can't we just accept our size and weight in politics and work within those bounds?

  • Hey ju1ce, they voted for McGuinty for the same reasons people voted conservative!

  • No kidding out of touch; 200 dollars a year for electricity savings for a family.

    I still wonder why people vote McGuinty.

  • Northern Ontario makes up only eight per cent of Ontario’s population and will always be outnumbered by the south. The corporate, media and political elites of Toronto have grown so out of touch with the economic hardships and challenges of the North. It stands to reason that we will never get a say in the governing or a real voice that represents the people of Northern Ontario….
    Maybe we could become our own Province…

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